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  1. Dolly Johnson (born late 1820s, died after 1887), in later life known as Aunt Dolly, was a small-business owner and domestic worker. She was posthumously described as "one of the finest cooks that ever lived in Greeneville, Tennessee".

  2. 26 de abr. de 2022 · The woman in the photograph below, taken by Frances Benjamin Johnston in the White House kitchen, has often been identified as Dolly Johnson. However, the Library of Congress dates the photograph “between ca. 1891 to 1893.”

  3. Laura Johnson Dandridge (1852–1918), also known as Dolly Johnson, was a 19th-century African American female head chef at the White House, the executive mansion of the U.S. government. She worked in the White House during the Benjamin Harrison administration and then again, after taking some time off for her daughter's health ...

  4. 24 de ene. de 2023 · Laura “DollyJohnson, a formerly enslaved Black woman from Kentucky, held this position twice. In 1889, President Benjamin Harrison hired Johnson after firing his French chef.

  5. J.P. Johnson guest hosts to celebrate the life of Dolly Johnson Dandridge (1852-1918), a Kentucky native who was the White House Chef for President Benjamin ...

  6. 19 de feb. de 2008 · Dolly Johnson, cook for President Benjamin Harrison in the early 1890s. Johnson, who had cooked for the Harrison family in Indiana, was summoned to the White House by President Harrison to...

  7. Johnson, Laura "Dolly". (born: 1852 - died: 1918) Dolly Johnson, an African American from Kentucky, was the cook for President Benjamin Harrison. She had cooked for the Harrison family in Indiana sometime prior to their move to the White House. She was summoned to the White House by President Harrison around 1889 to replace Madame Petronard, a ...